Earlier this month, the Association for Education in Journalism and Mass Communication approved a unanimous resolution urging schools to refrain from censorship made lawful by the Supreme Court’s 1988 ruling in Hazelwood School District v. Kuhlmeier.

“As the leading scholastic journalism education group, we must stand tall and scream at injustice,” JEA President Mark Newton said in a statement. “Make no mistake, the Hazelwood Supreme Court decision and its subsequent interpretations are an injustice to education, students, advisers and the First Amendment.”

The disapproval of the nation’s leading journalism educators is of legal significance because the Supreme Court declared in Hazelwood that schools could lawfully censor their students’ “curricular” speech to advance legitimate educational concerns. The JEA and AEJMC are now on record declaring that dampening the discussion of controversial issues should not be recognized by courts as a legitimate educational objective that can justify censorship.